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  In principle, can 
  a running Linux kernel recognize the addition of new physical hardware 
  resources such as CPUs, memory, or PCI devices?  Strictly speaking, I'm 
  not asking just about a running Xen instance -- but about a standalone, booted 
  OS.   -M.    Mark,    I'm not an expert on this subject, but I 
beleive at the moment only by kernel directly supported hotpluggable 
devices are PCI[xe] devices, USB devices and hard-disks (SCSI, not sure about 
IDE). That is for a running Linux kernel, and I don't think it matters if it's 
on top of Xen or not.   Xen allows some trickery 
that can allow you to make more or less number of CPU's available to the guest 
by assigning more virtual CPU's than actual CPU's to the guest, and later on 
move the guest to more or fewer real CPU's. [That is, if I've understood things 
correctly].    This allows the 
capability of hotplugging CPU's to the Linux kernel - but it's not a part of the 
kernel itself, it's an external patch.    And the patch is just 
disabling/enabling the memory itself, not allowing it to be physically 
removed/inserted.   -- Mats _______________________________________________
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